How To Increase Your MCAT Score By 10 Points Within 30 Days

When you’re constantly getting MCAT score results that aren’t what you expect, that aren’t where you need them to be competitive for med-school, you can’t help but feel defeated.

It’s discouraging when you can’t get over the 500 mark. It’s frustrating when your score isn’t increasing. Worst of all, it’s scary not knowing if you’ll increase your MCAT score enough when the MCAT date much closer than you’d like.

You wonder if you should push your MCAT date a little further. You wonder if you’ll have to retake the MCAT. Your confidence diminishes and you start searching for answers...

Your search for answers may have brought you here and it is our intention that after you read this article, you won’t have to look anywhere else.

More...

In this article, we want to show you that it’s possible to improve your score quickly and in great leaps. It’ll take some mental reframing and restructuring of your current MCAT study habits, but if you’re up for it, you can see as much as a 10 or more-point score increase very fast.

How is that possible? You’ll soon learn that increasing your MCAT score is not about how much you’re studying and memorizing. We trust that you’ve already been doing your best with studying but it’s not being reflected in your score.

At the same time, we know (and trust that you know this too) that you’re great at that type of studying, after years of non stop schooling and ‘content-based’ exams.

If it was just about studying and memorization, nearly every premed would be conquering the MCAT. That would be inefficient for admission committees in many ways. The last thing they want is to make the MCAT something you’re comfortable with.

Knowing AAMC intentions is a key factor. If you’re going to increase your MCAT score by 10 points or more and if you’re aiming to get a competitive overall MCAT score, here’s the first thing you need to know…

The difference between those who get 510+ MCAT scores and those who don’t, is the strategies they use to train themselves to think in the way AAMC wants you to think.

Read that last sentence a few more times, because that’s what it really boils down to.

What kind of strategies are we talking about? For example, 510+ scorers know exactly how analyze passages, questions, and answer choices, to pinpoint correct answers with a level of speed and accuracy that average premeds will never get.

It doesn’t take long before, with steady and strategic practice, they’re able to refine this skillset and start seeing significant improvements in their MCAT score.

Speaking of practice, another example is that 510+ scorers know how (and when) to take and review practice exams that lead to the greatest insights in how they can increase their MCAT score on the next practice exam.

We have dozens of strategy examples and ways that 510+ scorers are doing what the average premed isn’t doing, which naturally and usually puts them in the top 10% percent of MCAT scorers. Which as a result, gets their med-school application to the top of the pile.

Your main objective, if you want to increase your MCAT score by 10 points or more, is to apply correct, reliable strategies to get yourself to start thinking like a top scorer (and we’ll explain exactly what that means later in this post).

So let’s begin with your first lesson in improving your MCAT score…

Part 1: How To Increase Your MCAT Score – To Become A Top Scorer, Think Like A Top Scorer

If you’ve already read ‘MCAT advice’ elsewhere, you’ll notice ours is different in that we constantly reference ‘top scorers’ and ‘510+ scorers’. You might be wondering why we do this and/or where we get our information from. So let’s quickly get that out of the way…

As someone urgently seeking ways to improve your MCAT score, how often do you feel confident in the MCAT advice you’re receiving?

Over the many years we’ve been around and from the thousands of premeds we’ve encountered, we’ve realized that too many premeds are studying for the MCAT using traditional, outdated, and ineffective strategies that individuals (and companies) with no credibility have spread.

They wonder why their MCAT scores aren’t increasing and start blaming themselves. Everyone knows that there must be some proven strategic way to doing well on the MCAT, so everyone asks each other. People give their opinions but no one really knows for sure if what they're doing is right.

It's rare to get helpful and reliable MCAT advice, strategies, techniques, and recommendations to master the MCAT from credible sources. The people on forums could be anybody – who REALLY knows what their score actually is? Have they been officially verified by a third party? We’ve never found this to be the case.

Unfortunately, many of these MCAT strategies are also from big name prep companies that many students pay a lot of money for. Using big name companies is not a problem for content learning, but we wouldn’t be so quick to adopt their strategy advice (which is the most important aspect of MCAT prep).

Also, friends who are writing the MCAT with you aren’t any better. Asking them for advice is like applying for a job and asking the guy next to you (who is applying for the same job), on how to master the interview…

Why not just ask someone who has already been hired? Someone who has already mastered the interview….

We like to emphasize that the logical and the smartest thing to do is to use the same MCAT strategies and hacks of those who have proved their credibility, those who are true masters of the MCAT...

Those who are where you want to be (med-school). Those who scored what you want to score (i.e. 510+).

Now wouldn't that be the most reliable, quickest and smartest path to increasing your MCAT score?

“If I have seen further than others, it's by standing on the shoulder of giants.”- Isaac Newton

"Success leaves clues. Go figure out what someone who was successful did and model it. Improve it, but learn their steps. They have knowledge."- Tony Robbins

It's simple and it’s our ultimate MCAT success philosophy - if you want to be the best, learn from the best.

The best part is they're not competing with you since they're already in med-school or have already written the MCAT, so they'd be happy to help you with genuine information you can trust.

Some people are lucky because they have an older sibling or friend who mastered the MCAT and helps them out. Others pay ridiculous prices to get tutored by them.

It's not fair for most premeds and we know it. Not everyone has such connections, or hundreds and even thousands of dollars to spend on MCAT tutors who have actually received an impressive MCAT score.

If you wanted to take this approach, you must ask yourself where do you find top scorers of the MCAT? More importantly, where do you find the time and energy to do the research and meet them to pick their brains? And you don't want to just talk to one, you want to talk as many as possible to notice patterns and commonalities that you can trust actually work.

It's not happening. No premed is going to spend the energy, time, and money to make this happen… Which makes sense. As a premed, you have way too many things on your plate anyway to fit a huge project like that in. Well that’s where we come in…

Since 2014 we've been researching and compiling proven MCAT strategies from different top scorers of the MCAT. We still hold paid top MCAT scorer interviews so we can keep up to date with any new methods, processes, tips, and score-increasing shortcuts that we've never seen before.

We've seen patterns amongst these elites in how they prep for the MCAT. Many of these top scorers have scored in the 100th percentile, gotten 132 on CARS, are in top med-schools, and even personally know creators of MCAT exams.

We conduct this research because we want to make this stressful and probably one of the hardest phases of your life as a future doctor, much easier. We know that if you had a reliable blueprint, a map, that tells you exactly how to proceed with studying for the MCAT in a way that top scorers before you have done, you get clarity, you get confidence, and most importantly, you get results…

And that’s what we’ve dedicated ourselves to bring to you.

There are some things only experience teaches you. Top scorers are experienced and have figured it out already, so you can learn from them without wasting your own time and energy.

​​With that said, now that you see the importance of using top scorer MCAT strategies, now that you know where we get our information from, we want to devote the rest of this entire article in providing you with MCAT strategies based on real top scorer insights we’ve collected on how they increased their MCAT scores by 10 points or more (sometimes within very short periods of time), so you can do the same.

​The first strategy is conquering a struggle that according to most top scorers on the MCAT, is the biggest culprit of low MCAT scores. This is usually the number one reason why most MCAT writers don't see their score increasing.

Applying this strategy and fixing this challenge alone, might be all you need to improve your MCAT score to the competitive 510+ level…

reminder

Have you joined the Free 10-Day 510+ Scorer MCAT Strategy Email Course yet? We'll send you a different 510+ scorer MCAT prep strategy everyday for 10 days! Enrollment is free for a limited time.

Do you find yourself getting things wrong that you thought you knew? Do you notice mistakes that clearly show you weren’t reading carefully?

You’ve done the studying. You know the material in and out yet you have very little time left before the MCAT and you don’t get why your score isn’t increasing as much as it should.

There’s a likely reason for this.

Top MCAT scorers have realized that the MCAT is more than a test about the content on the exam. It’s even more than just critical thinking...

One of the biggest mistakes a lot of premeds make is not realizing that the MCAT is also a test of your mental and physical stamina.

The reason your score is likely not increasing is because of stamina. MCAT testing endurance is a very underestimated skillset. Yet, it is one of the MAJOR skills that most top MCAT scorers give credit to in allowing them to increase their MCAT scores.

Like we've mentioned already, this exam is unlike any other test you’ve written. It’s very endurance heavy. Without any stamina training, do you really think you have the ability to sit there and use your brain effectively in test mode for 7.5 straight hours? HIGHLY unlikely.

Beyond the 2-3 hour mark, most top scorers knew that they really had to train their mind to stay focused and in ‘peak-performance’ state for the rest of the exam. You too, really have to train your endurance and stamina if you want to see your MCAT score improve.

We’ve come across a lot of premeds and a good guess would be that the average MCAT writer studies for 1 hour and takes a break for ​another hour during MCAT prep.

The problem? Lack of stamina and ability to focus.

If you do this as well, or some form of it, it’s not your fault. This is how you’re used to studying because that’s all you needed to do all throughout your life to get good grades. But for the MCAT, and for the rest of your med-school career in fact, this needs to change.

You can also be certain that stamina is your main culprit if you find you did well on all the courses that are tested on the MCAT (Biology, Chem, General Chem, O Chem) but aren’t doing well on practice exams.

Maybe you find yourself ‘getting through’ 7-hour practice exams and think you’re able to do it. But ‘getting through’ and staying on top of your mental game the ENTIRE time, is a different story. To get to the 510+ competitive level, you need to become a test-taking machine by using top scorer energy management strategies.

If you’re more aware of yourself, you may have even had multiple realizations already of how you’re not using your mind enough to think critically throughout the entire 7-hour time span.

So how do you improve your MCAT test taking stamina and as a result improve your MCAT score? Here are 2 strategies recommended by 90+ percentile MCAT scorers…

You’ve probably already heard that the “MCAT is a marathon, not a sprint”. Most people have heard it. Yet, the students who actually take it seriously and act on such a valuable insight, are the ones who get the highest MCAT scores.

Top scorers always see the MCAT as a marathon. You definitely don’t want to compete in a marathon if you’ve never properly completed one before! You’ll lose.

You should have completed as many marathons as possible before the big event to ensure that stamina will NOT be a problem for you. When stamina doesn’t get in your way, only then can you properly focus on technique, strategy, and analysis.

When it comes to conquering the MCAT, your practice exams are your marathons. Remember, MCAT stamina can only be strengthened by the way in which you practice.

The key to dominating the MCAT and developing optimal stamina is full length practice exams. As many as you can. Non-stop full length practice exams.

We know top scorers on the MCAT who studied for less than 30 days (two studied for the MCAT only 18 days) and they all scored in the top 2%. It's almost unreal but what do they all give credit to? Practice exams.

If you seriously want to increase your MCAT score by 10 points or more within 30 days, one of the best things you could do is to go hard on full length, timed practice exams.

This will not only train your stamina, but will also train yourself in being able to actually apply the material you have been studying.

At the same time, all of these top scorers also knew exactly how and when to strategically take the exam, and also how to review them. We cover a lot of powerful top scorer practice exam strategies in detail in some other posts on our blog, in our newsletter, and especially in our downloadable guides and reports.

We highly recommend checking out these resources we have for you because with every practice exam, you want to get maximum value from it, so each exam can have its maximum impact on your score. Especially when there are limited practice exams with the AAMC, you want to make sure you're not wasting even one of them.

Next, a common advice you'll receive from top scorers is that during practice tests, to never stop the timer. Once you’ve started a section, you need to finish it through. Remember that simulation of the real MCAT exam is extremely important.

The same applies to taking breaks – only take them like you would if you were writing the actual MCAT.

To start, see how long you can go for with the first practice exam. Be aware of when you burn out. That’ll give you a good idea of how much of a stamina improvement you need.

After you do your practice exams, you’ll need to analyze them. You can analyze them for deficiency in stamina by using the following strategy…

Break up your practice exam into hourly phases, after you’ve written it and are in analysis mode.

Your goal is to analyze and figure out which phase of the practice exam you are getting answers the most incorrect during practice tests.

Break up your phases by hours. Where are you struggling the most? In the first and second hour? The third and fourth? Fifth and sixth? Or the last one?

If you’re getting the most answers incorrect in the first hour, your issue might be your ability to get comfortable and into your mental ‘zone’. Your solution could simply be that you need to get in your ‘zone’ before the test so you don’t waste that first hour or two not performing optimally.

How do you get in the ‘zone’? Everyone has their own ways. Many MCAT Masters leveraged flashcards and notes and read them through before the exam. Do what works for you. For some, doing that gets them worried and anxious.

This is why simulating real test day simulations is important – so you can get to know yourself, what works for you, what throws you off, etc.

If you’re getting most answers incorrect in hours four to seven, your issue may be that you’re losing focus. You need to ask yourself why you’re losing focus. Again, everyone is different.

If you’re getting most answers incorrect in the last few hour(s) of the MCAT, you’re probably in the same boat as 85% MCAT of writers.

Most people are burnt out at this point. This is your point of leverage. Do not waste this.

Put in the effort so that you can perform at your best during this phase. If you can, you’re setting yourself up for a competitive score.

A lot of times, there could be several easy questions that you don’t want to avoid. They could be sitting right at the end of a passage or section.

You need to cultivate awareness and focus at the last stage especially, so you don’t miss these easy points that others will surely miss because of burnout.

Remember, the top scorer recommendations you'll get in this article, in our other posts, and especially in our downloadable top scorer MCAT strategy guides and reports, are extremely valuable only if you act on them and try to see their results for yourself.

Increasing your test-taking stamina could very likely be the only key you need to giving your MCAT score a HUGE increase in a very short period of time.

In the next section of this article, we’re going to cover some common proven strategies based on real case studies of how premeds like you increased their MCAT scores by 10 points or more and achieved a competitive MCAT score.

Imagine leaving the exam room on your MCAT test date smiling, with a ‘good feeling’. A knowing that the exam went just as well as it usually did on the practice exams you’ve been taking, and you know what kind of score result you can expect a month from now.

A month later – you were right, and you’re overflowing with joy! Would you come back and help other students who are struggling with the MCAT, who are hoping to be in your shoes soon?

Well, a lot of top scorers did come back and because of those generous future doctors who were willing to give back, we’re able to share these tips and strategies with you. We hope you choose to do the same when you get your competitive MCAT score J

Here we have three proven strategies that are highly recommended for you to start applying to improve your MCAT score.

Everyone writing the MCAT has a unique background that they’re strong in. For some, it’s Physics and they can breeze through that section on the MCAT. Others who are English majors, have an easier time with CARS.

The trap is that we like to spend time reading and learning the content that we’re comfortable with. We enjoy the process of ‘understanding’ easily. We like getting the right answers. We feel smart. As a result, almost unconsciously and automatically, most premeds spend a lot of time in their comfort zone with their ‘comfort subjects’.

Almost every top scorer we’ve come across stresses this point hard; get out of your comfort zone and focus on your weakest areas. Right now, you know which is your weakest section. You know which is your second weakest section. Prioritize these subjects in your MCAT prep schedule based on which needs most attention and which needs the least.

Don’t try to balance studying through all sections. Trying to balance studying like that, will NOT help balance your MCAT score! Which is extremely important. You don’t want to send in an MCAT score that clearly highlights a ‘problem section’. Med-schools want ‘all-rounders’.

Plus, if you’re scoring 128 or 129 on CARS for example, you’re probably just missing the hardest questions on that section. Instead of trying to get that score to 130, your time and energy is MUCH better spent trying to get your 126 C/P score to a 128+. It’s definitely an easier improvement.

We know sometimes it feels like ‘it’s so close to 130, I just need to spend a little more time to get it there’. It’s like a game, where you’re so close and you just want to hit that target. But realize that’s your ego talking, not your ‘inner doctor’!

Top scorers know the key is to maintain awareness of these internal biases that could be holding you back from studying in the smartest way possible.

Time and time again, we hear 510+ scorers mention how they incorporated two important habits into their MCAT prep…

Meditation and exercise.

Students dismiss these habits because they’re not ‘tangible’. When you’re doing these things, you’re not actually doing anything MCAT-related. The flawed premise most of us have is that if you’re not doing anything MCAT related, it’s not going to help you on the MCAT.

This is the mentality of the average scoring MCAT writer. To be fair, this is more a rational justification most people make to avoid stepping outside their comfort zone. Although, on an internal level, we believe everyone knows that these are beneficial activities.

Top scorers on the other hand (and the most successful people in the world), know that these are activities that strengthen and ENHANCE your mental and physical abilities.

When you spend 20 minutes of your day meditating and 30 minutes of your day exercising, that 50-minute time and energy investment will give you back SO much more efficiency in your MCAT prep, than if you hadn’t done any of those things.

These are perfect activities to incorporate when you’re taking breaks for studying. Start incorporating these daily habits and like many top scorers before you, you’ll notice an improvement in every aspect of your MCAT prep life, including your score.

If your scores aren't improving, if you're not able to get beyond a certain threshold like the 500 mark, you’re likely not not leveraging practice exams resourcefully. Here we’ll cover a few quick highly recommended top scorer practice exam strategies.

First, a major factor in using practice tests efficiently to increase your MCAT score, as top scorers recommend, is to constantly identify and reflect on the reasons for your mistakes.

For example, if you get a discouraging score on a practice test, it's tempting to go hard on the books. Don't. Don’t study from a place of anxiety. Take some time to rest and go back to the practice test AFTER you're in a clear, focused, positive mindset. This could be a few hours later or the next day.

Giving yourself time to rejuvenate is important because it helps you refresh your mind and avoid burnout. When you rest, you’re able to proficiently see your mistakes and your reasons for making them.

This will greatly help you identify exactly where you keep making the same errors, why you’re making them, and that’s when you’ll identify exactly what you need to do to STOP making them. As a result, you’ll see your MCAT score rise with every practice exam you take AND correctly analyze.

Also, top scorers ensure that they not only analyze why they got questions wrong, but also WHY they got questions right. When you’re done your practice exams, don’t ignore all your correct answers. Take time to go through those as well.

Another key top scorer practice test strategy is to schedule practice tests very regularly to help maximize your score. Don't leave them to later. You want to track your progress and not be surprised at what you see when the exam is too close.

So far, in a way we’ve kept you ‘inside the forest’ interacting with individual trees, giving you some strategies and opening your eyes to how you can improve your MCAT score using proven methods and strategies of top scorers before you.

As we end this article, we want to fly you out of the jungle and give you a ‘bird’s eye view’ of the entire forest, so you can see the big picture. So you can see exactly how a top scorer, and more importantly, a future doctor, looks at the MCAT.

This is the perspective that’s going to evolve you into preparing for the MCAT like a top scorer, and hopefully keep you on the path of consistent increases in your MCAT score…

last call

Have you joined the Free 10-Day 510+ Scorer MCAT Strategy Email Course yet? We'll send you a different 510+ scorer MCAT prep strategy everyday for 10 days! Enrollment is free for a limited time.

Part 4: How To Increase Your MCAT Score - The Big Picture That Keeps Top Scorers Motivated, Focused, and Strategic

For most premeds, there are just a few moments in life as painful as the moment of realizing that med-school is no longer a possibility....

That all those years of hard work and money invested, has gone to waste.

Sadly, this year approximately 60% of med-school applicants aren’t going to get in.

Some will be forced to take a gap year.

Many will watch their friends receive acceptances and won’t be able to help but feel left behind.

Just take a look at the 2016-2017 stats below taken straight from the AAMC website:

Total Applicants – 52,042

Mean MCAT Score – 501.8

Total Matriculates (admissions) – 21,030

Mean MCAT Score – 508.7

Clearly, this is a competitive journey with every premed fighting to secure their future as a doctor...

And the number one factor that decides every premeds fate of becoming a doctor?

You guessed it - the MCAT.

It determines so much more than most average-scoring premeds realize. Top scorers internalize and recognize the true power it holds.

In fact, here’s an insider look at what’s happening behind the scenes with admission committees’ (AdComs) when it comes to student MCAT scores...

Think about it, when you have over 12,000 applications for a class size of 120 students, you need a way to filter out how many applications you’re going to manually review.

So med schools use computers to screen out applicants. Using a computer to filter based on MCAT scores is the easiest way to do this. Which means if you don’t meet the minimum score for the med-school you applied to, your application is automatically sent to the rejection pile.

Which means no human will ever see your application. Which means the years spent sitting through all those long premed classes, are all wasted.

All the extracurriculars you squirmed to fit into your busy schedule, sacrificing all the “family and friends” time, are all wasted.

Knowing this keeps top scorers motivated, and it should do the same for you.

At the same time, this also tells you something else…

If the MCAT was created as a ‘filtering strategy’, it must be created in a way that pulls out the select few who have prepared for it a special way compared to the vast majority…

The vast majority will be preparing exactly how they prepared for premed classes. Unlike you, the vast majority of MCAT writers won’t have come across MCAT Mastery. Which is unfortunate because what any top MCAT scorer will tell you is that first, you must realize that what worked in your premed classes won’t work for the MCAT.

Most MCAT test writers don’t know this or don’t know the true extent of this fact, but getting a decent score in your premed classes is a joke compared to the MCAT.

Top MCAT scorers recognize that premed classes have always been about the memorization of facts and equations. Those classes are focused on how well you know the content. If you know the content inside out, you can get a high grade (even if you study last minute).

You and most premeds have been doing this pretty much all your life (and the creators of the MCAT know this). Most people have been studying in the same way to get the same decent scores. By now most premeds around you, have figured out how to get a decent score on regular exams...

Which is why the MCAT is purposely made to NOT be like a regular exam. If it was, that wouldn't help AAMC at all in determining whose application to actually take a look at it.

So they made the MCAT into a completely different monster. It tests much more than just how well you know the content. This is why the majority of MCAT test takers walk out of the exam shaking with anxiety...

Knowing they'll have to re-test.

You might already know that the MCAT is primarily a critical thinking and analysis exam. But the reason why you'll see most test writers walking out of the exam speechless, struck by confusion and worry, is because they didn't know this one important truth:

In an exam that tests your critical thinking and reasoning skills, you're guaranteed to see questions that have hidden traps, surprises, never before seen content, and trick questions swaying you towards the wrong answers.

If you’ve done practice exams, I’m sure you’ve already seen this torture at play. This is one of the reasons you finish the exam and feel like you guessed on way too many questions...

Or worst is when you feel like you actually did well on the exam only to find a horrible score staring you in the face.

So it’s not your fault if you've been feeling frustrated, overwhelmed, and confused during your MCAT prep because the MCAT is created to throw you off your game...

To get you completely outside your comfort zone. To be overwhelming and unlike anything you’ve ever seen before.

Now you must be wondering why the AAMC would do things like create questions with content that they know students won't recognize.

The answer is simple and many top scorers know this:

Because the MCAT was made to identify future doctors.

In the beginning of this article, we mentioned one important point:

The difference between those who get 510+ MCAT scores and those who don’t, is the strategies they use to train themselves to think in the way AAMC wants you to think.

One of the main goals of the MCAT is to test your reasoning and critical thinking abilities in a way that's identical to what doctors have to do every day, with every patient they meet...

So the MCAT is a filtering strategy to get students who are already thinking in this particular way, through the med-school doors. Why?

Because as a doctor and as med student, you're going to experience the unknown all the time...

An example is when your reading passages, especially a CARS passage, and you know (just as most top-scorers do), that the answer is in the passage...

At the same time, you know you have to find the answer quickly. It's not like the answer is in your head . Which means you have to develop the ability to think on your feet.

How good are you at thinking on your feet?

When you read a CARS passage, we're sure you've already experienced seeing all this information that you don’t know the meaning to...

Or you've read information that is difficult to make sense of...

In scenarios like this, can you still find the answer on the spot?

The average premed can't do this and this is where top MCAT scorers stand out. The average premed runs out of time on the CARS section and ends up having to guess way too much.

Top scorers know it all comes back to 'thinking like a doctor.'...

Just like when you become a physician, you’ll be constantly presented with information you’ve never seen before. Now, how are you going to help your patient solve their challenge?

The skill is in truly being able to understand your patient. In the same way with CARS, top scorers know that the skill is in truly being able to understand the author of the passage.

So naturally, all the top scorers we've researched, have come up with brilliant ways to understand the author of the passage that doesn't require you to really 'get' everything the author is talking about.

There are shortcuts, techniques, and strategies that top scorers use, that makes their ability to go through passages and find the right answer 10x easier than what a normal premed would do.

You can learn ALL of these strategies, and all the strategies you'll ever need to know in the downloadable MCAT strategy guide and reports we have for you, but remember, it all comes down to knowing that you're being tested on if you are able to think like a doctor.

As you progress in your "becoming a DR." journey, you'll have to train your mind to to think strategically and to be able to take on anything out of the ordinary that comes at you.

You’ll have to be able to spot the traps from a mile away and at a quick pace.

Top scorers realize that med-schools don't want to teach you how to think like this from scratch...

They just want people who ALREADY think like this to join.

Knowing all of this, one of the most effective courses of action you can take right now is getting yourself in the mindset where you look at the MCAT NOT as something that’s a dreaded barrier to med-school, but as something moulding you into becoming who you dream to be one day… a doctor…

The key is to not fight the MCAT. Instead, dance with it. Prepare not for a big exam date, but a performance date. Practice your performance and perfect it by recognizing where you keep stumbling. Most importantly, learn how to perform using the right techniques, with the right mentors who have already received multiple standing ovations.

Take on a positive lens where you can enjoy this journey and this process. If you truly can get what we’re saying, if you can truly get why top scorers internalize this idea, you’ll see it reflected the speed at which you improve your MCAT score.

last last call 🙂

Have you joined the Free 10-Day 510+ Scorer MCAT Strategy Email Course yet? We'll send you a different 510+ scorer MCAT prep strategy everyday for 10 days! Enrollment is free for a limited time.

P.S. The most important question you can ask yourself right now is are you willing to spend the time and energy it will take to learn and apply a smarter approach to your MCAT prep?

We've found most premeds don't want to spend time and energy to figure out the right approach. It feels like the MCAT is closer than ever before and there's no time to 'make changes'.

A lot of top MCAT scorers were facing these same challenges, but they clearly managed to get over it. They realized that spending time to learn the right way to prep for the MCAT is like spending time sharpening your axe before cutting down a massive tree.

Sure, sharpening the axe takes some time and energy, but that pays off tremendously when it's time to chop.

Top MCAT scorers don't view changing their MCAT prep as time wasted, but time invested.

​So before you leave, make a commitment to yourself...

​A commitment that you'll invest the time to "sharpen your axe", which means identifying and using strategic methods to improving your approach to MCAT prep and as a result, improving your score.

If you're willing make that commitment, we can guarantee you'll see your score hit the 510+ mark.

Did you know in a way, this entire test is based on commitment as well? (Click to learn why)

Top scorers look at the MCAT as a test AAMC created to see how committed premeds really are to medicine.

If students are anything less than genuinely interested in medicine, this exam will be near impossible to overcome because they're not going to want to study for it.

They're going to want to give up. They're not going to want to change studying habits for this exam and adapt.

They're testing a lot of student's commitments to see if they can actually endure several months of struggling through this exam and come out victorious.

So ask yourself how bad do you really want your dreams? If you want it as bad as we think you do, then we're going to make that happen. We promise you we have everything you need.